This paper presents the philosophical and mechanical foundations of the Flujo Conducido (FC) model. It complements the operational article that defines its behavioral states and tools by focusing on the underlying mechanism that explains human behavior. The central thesis is that human action can be understood as memory executing: patterns encoded through past experiences that are automatically activated in response to similar conditions. Identity, desire, perception, and suffering emerge from this same mechanism. Consciousness does not operate directly on the present moment but on the encoding process—what memory retains from each experience—which determines future behavior. Because life continuously changes while memory preserves past configurations, obsolescence is inevitable. FC is therefore proposed as a maintenance system for human operative memory: identifying active patterns, evaluating their functionality, updating those that are no longer adaptive, and restoring spontaneous functioning.
Andrés Felipe Libreros Santana (Sun,) studied this question.